The fallow period as a weed-break in shifting cultivation (tropical wet forests)
- 30 June 1995
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment
- Vol. 54 (1-2) , 31-43
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0167-8809(95)00590-o
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential Weed Suppression Ability in Upland Rice CultivarsAgronomy Journal, 1992
- The Role of Weeds in the Productivity of Amazonian Bush Fallow AgricultureExperimental Agriculture, 1991
- Seeds in a rainforest soil and their relation to shifting cultivation in the Ivory CoastWeed Research, 1988
- Ecological implications of traditional weeding and other imposed weeding regimes under slash‐and‐burn agriculture (jhum) in northeastern IndiaWeed Research, 1988
- Monoculture, polyculture, and polyvariety in tropical forest Swidden cultivationHuman Ecology, 1983
- Population dynamics of Eupatorium adenophorum Spreng. during secondary succession after slash and burn agriculture (jhum) in north eastern IndiaWeed Research, 1982
- The influence of fallow period on weed vegetation and rice yields in Sierra LeoneTropical Pest Management, 1982
- Population Dynamics of Eupatorium odoratum in Successional Environments Following Slash and Burn AgricultureJournal of Applied Ecology, 1981
- Geographic Patterning in Tropical Weed Communities and Early Secondary SuccessionsBiotropica, 1980
- The Flew of Energy in an Agricultural SocietyScientific American, 1971